Cincinnati Volksfreund

The Cincinnati Volksfreund was a daily and weekly German-language newspaper based in Cincinnati, Ohio, published between 1850 and 1908 with offices located on the southwest corner of Vine and Longworth streets.[1]

Cincinnati Volksfreund
Cincinnati Weekly Volksfreund
TypeDaily and weekly newspaper
Owner(s)Various (see prose)
Founder(s)Joseph A. Hemann
Founded1850
Political alignmentDemocratic Party
LanguageGerman
Ceased publication1908
HeadquartersCincinnati, Ohio, United States
OCLC number9664107

The paper was founded in October 1850 by Joseph A. Hemann and his editorials began appearing in March 1853 in the weekly edition called the Cincinnati Wöchentlicher Volksfreund. Originally neutral in politics, it later became the leading German Democratic newspaper of Ohio.

Editors and owners [2]

  • 18501863  Joseph Anton Hemann, founder, publisher, editor
  • 18631869  Johann B. Jeup & Co.
  • 18701871  Volksfreund Publishing Co.
  • 18721873  Limberg & Thilly
  • 18731879  Limberg & Heinrich Haacke
  • 18801908  Heinrich Haacke and Co.
gollark: The code/paper you find isn't going to be conveniently usable by just downloading it and copypasting it into your AI's code or something. You'll probably have to actually understand how it works, yet another unfathomable general intelligence task, figure out how it interfaces with the rest of the code or if it can even be used together at all, and possibly rewrite it entirely to fit with what you need.
gollark: "Pluck it out" is also easy to say, but it's actually even harder.
gollark: "Find useful stuff" also sounds pleasantly easy, but it's *not*. Even a human reading a repository or paper may struggle to find "useful" bits; reasoning about the relevance of a new set of information or methods for a project is a difficult general intelligence task.
gollark: I mean, "list of AI" is probably easy enough, you could just... search github using some keywords, and maybe research papers.
gollark: Just because you can describe a task in a sentence or so doesn't mean you can give a description clear and detailed enough to think about programming it.

See also

References

  1. Kenny, Daniel (1875). Illustrated Cincinnati. Stevens. p. 69. Retrieved May 19, 2013.
  2. Griswold, Ada Tyng (1911). Annotated Catalogue of Newspaper Files in the Library of the State Historical Society of Wisconsin. Democrat printing Company. p. 222.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.